CLASS 1 is the set of the video and audio files below:~ Class 1 Part 1 Emilie speaks about Bone health with related context and discussion.~ Class 1 Part 2 Emilie lays out the sequence in detail with related discussion.~ Class 1 Rewind A rewind of the sequence. Excerpts from Class.~ Class 1 Sounds Tutorial Emilie reviews the sounds used for this sequence:Negative Space O’s, Puffed O’s, and Jacques, excerpts from Class.~ 2 Conference Call Recordings (audio)

CLASS 2 is the set of the video and audio files below:~ Class 2 Part 1 Emilie speaks about Bone marrow, Mala with related context, discussion, and Mala practice around the throat.~ Class 2 Part 2 Emilie lays out the sequence in detail with related discussion.~ Class 2 Rewind A rewind of the sequence. Excerpts from Class. ~ Class 2 Sounds Tutorial Tutorial Emilie reviews the Mala breath.~ 2 Conference Call Recordings (audio)

Your Instructor

Emilie Conrad

Emilie Conrad, the founder of Continuum Movement, lived in Los Angeles, California. She is a visionary whose work is incorporated by an International audience of professionals from fields such as Rolfing, Zero Balancing, Hellerwork, CranioSacral, Osteopathy, Physical Therapy, Dance, Psychoneuroimmunology, and Physical Fitness.

Her love for movement inspired her to discover the essential, primary movements common to all life forms that lie beneath cultural influence. These fundamental movements are a “cosmology” of life, where form is fluidly mutable, dissolving and shaping itself anew.

Fluid, primary movement is essential in our ability to innovate. Enhancing these fundamental movements has a potential to create a rich intrinsic environment that brings forth new insights in our understanding of the human body and its potential to create alternate systems.

Emilie’s capacity for innovation is an inspiration to the field of Somatics, movement education, and physical fitness. She has created a dynamic workout that strengthens by incorporating multiple angles in gravity to facilitate developing diverse muscular and skeletal relationships.

One of Emilie’s contributions is her revolutionary concept of “The Three Anatomies”. Here she defines three distinct tissue structures as the cultural, primordial, and cosmic anatomies. Emilie tells us: “becoming aware of the primordial-cosmic flows of information can be instrumental in diffusing our cultural inhibitors, helping us to move beyond our stifling adaptive patterns, ultimately becoming a resource for health and creativity.”